Triple Olympic Gold medalist Franjo von Allmen of Team Switzerland poses for a photo with his medals at the team hotel on Feb. 12 in Bormio, Italy.
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Christian Petersen/Getty Images Europe
The Olympic medal is one of the most coveted awards that an athlete can receive. But at this year’s Winter Games in Milan, medalists are celebrating cautiously.
“I was jumping in excitement and it broke,” American skier Breezy Johnson said after earning her gold medal on Sunday. She warned other medalists “Don’t jump in them.”
Johnson is one of several athletes who reported their medals detaching from their ribbon and in one case, breaking in half.
American skier Breezy Johnson holds up her gold medal on the podium of the women’s downhill event during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre in Cortina d’Ampezzo on Feb. 8.
Stefano Rellandini/AFP via Getty Images
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Stefano Rellandini/AFP via Getty Images
At a press briefing on Tuesday, Olympic organizing committee spokesperson Luca Casassa said he was aware that there were issues with some medals. He added that a solution has been identified and encouraged athletes with faulty medals to return them for repair.
“As a precaution, we are re-checking all the medals to make sure that the athletes’ joy can be really 360 degrees when they conquer something which is so precious and so important,” Casassa said in Italian.

He didn’t specify what the issue or the fix was.
This isn’t the first time that Olympic medals needed to be replaced. After the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, athletes raised concerns that their awards, which famously included pieces of the Eiffel Tower, were tarnishing and corroding after the games.
Athletes report faulty medals, but continue to celebrate their achievements
The exact moment when German biathlete Justus Strelow’s medal came loose was caught on camera. In a video that has since gone viral, Strelow’s teammates are seen clapping when a clang can be heard. The camera pans to Strelow, who picks up his medal and tries to re-attach it to his ribbon — leading to an awkward halt in celebrations.
In a video posted on Instagram, Alysa Liu, a figure skater with Team USA, showed off her ribbon-less medal, alongside the words, “My medal don’t need the ribbon.”
While most of the medal snafus were limited to strap issues, Swedish cross-country skier Ebba Andersson told Swedish broadcaster SVT that her silver broke in two when it fell in the snow.
Silver medalist Ebba Andersson of Team Sweden celebrates on the podium during the Medal Ceremony for the Women’s 10km + 10km Skiathlon on day one of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium on Feb. 7 in Val di Fiemme, Italy.
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Maddie Meyer/Getty Images Europe
Johnson, the American skier, said a small rectangular piece — that was supposed to hold the medal and ribbon together — came apart, making her medal unwearable.
“I’m sure somebody will fix it. It’s not crazy broken but a little broken,” she said on Sunday.
A few days later, Johnson told Reuters that she received a replacement medal, but she would prefer to have her original back, noting that her new medal was not yet engraved.
“They couldn’t fix it so they gave me a new one,” she said. “Although I’m actually curious, because then I think some of the later ones they were able to fix. So now I’m kind of wondering if maybe I can get the old one back fixed.”
Design flaw or manufacturing glitch?
This year’s medals resemble two halves coming together. In a video, Raffaella Paniè, who serves as the Brand, Identity and Look Director at this year’s Winter Games, said it was meant to symbolize how each victory is the result of the athlete, as well as their team of family, coaches and trainers.
Reuters reported that the medals featured a safety clip, intended to snap off when pulled forcefully to prevent the ribbon from strangling. The Milano-Cortina press team did not respond to an email request for comment about the medals’ clip function.
“It sounds like it’s not all of the metals, it’s just some of them, which leads me to believe that — just speculating — there’s some sort of manufacturing glitch,” said Doug McIndoe, editor of The MCA Advisory, a magazine from the Medal Collectors of America.

According to McIndoe, when cast metals are poured into mold and harden, it can cause the metal to shrink.
“It’s possible that the opening where that clip goes in is maybe slightly too big, just a few millimeters or less than that, and it’s just not securing that clip in properly,” he said.
He added that it’s an age-old question of how to make medals wearable, explaining that drilling a hole or incorporating one into the design of a mold to thread a ribbon through were historically unpopular methods. It wasn’t until the 1960s that Olympic medals began to be worn around athletes’ necks.
“Back from Roman times, they were, they were just something you hold in your hands and enjoy and a lot of them were issued in boxes,” McIndoe added.
Even with the design hiccups, this year’s gold and silver medals are worth the most they’ve been in a century. That’s because the price of these precious metals have soared over the past year. Several factors are contributing to record prices, but a main driver is President Trump’s tariffs, which is causing economic uncertainty in markets around the world, according to precious metals expert Peter Krauth.
Although each gold medal contains only 500 grams of actual gold (the rest is made of silver) Krauth estimates that their current worth stands at around $2,300 — twice their value during the Summer Olympics in July 2024. A silver medal is currently worth around $1,400 — nearly three times its value two years ago, he said.
Krauth believes the price of gold and silver will continue to remain high for years to come, even up to the 2028 Summer Olympics. But he noted that the real worth of Olympic medals comes from the athletic achievement behind it.
“The sentimental value of a medal is worth way more than the metal in the medal,” he said.
